A practical guide to Vasubandhu's classic work "Thirty Verses of Consciousness Only" that can transform modern life and change how you see the world.
In this down-to-earth book, Ben Connelly sure-handedly guides us through the intricacies of Yogacara and the richness of the Thirty Verses.
Dedicating a chapter of the book to each line of the poem, he lets us thoroughly lose ourselves in its depths. His warm and wise voice unpacks and contextualizes its wisdom, showing us how we can apply its ancient insights to our own modern lives, to create a life of engaged peace, harmony, compassion, and joy.
In fourth-century India one of the great geniuses of Buddhism, Vasubandhu, sought to reconcile the diverse ideas and forms of Buddhism practiced at the time and demonstrate how they could be effectively integrated into a single system. This was the Yogacara movement, and it continues to have great influence in modern Tibetan and Zen Buddhism. Thirty Verses on Consciousness Only, or Trimshika, is the most concise, comprehensive, and accessible work by this revered figure.
Vasubandhu's Thirty Verses lay out a path of practice that integrates the most powerful of Buddhism's psychological and mystical possibilities: Early Buddhism's practices for shedding afflictive emotional habit and the Mahayana emphasis on shedding divisive concepts, the path of individual liberation and the path of freeing all beings, the path to nirvana and the path of enlightenment as the very ground of being right now.
Although Yogacara has a reputation for being extremely complex, the Thirty Verses distills the principles of these traditions to their most practical forms, and this book follows that sense of focus; it goes to the heart of the matter how do we alleviate suffering through shedding our emotional knots and our sense of alienation?
This is a great introduction to a philosophy, a master, and a work whose influence reverberates throughout modern Buddhism.
Inside Vasubandhu's Yogacara: A Practitioner's Guide, Ben Connelly, Wisdom Publications, Paperback, 248 Pages, 2016, $16.95
Ben Connelly is a Soto Zen priest and Dharma heir to the Katagiri lineage. He teaches at Minnesota Zen Meditation Center. He lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and is the author of Inside the Grass Hut: Living Shitou's Classic Zen Poem.
Forward by Norman Fischer
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vii
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Introduction
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1
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"Thirty Verses on Consciousness Only"
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19
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1. Self and Other
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25
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2. The Eight-Consciousnesses Model
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31
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3. Store Consciousness
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37
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4. Aspects of the Buddhist Unconscious
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49
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5. Mind Makes Self and Other
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57
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6. Stuck on the Self
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63 |
7. Seeing Through I, Me, and Mine
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69
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8. The All
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73
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9. Mindfulness of Phenomena
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79
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10. Five Aggregates, Five Universal Factors
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83
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11. Cultivating Seeds of Goodness
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89
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12. Being with Suffering |
95
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13. Taking Care of Suffering
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101 |
14. Not Always So
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105
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15. The Water and the Waves
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109
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16. On Thinking
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115
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17. Projection Only
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121
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18. The Process of Consciousness
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127
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19. The Ripening of Karma
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131
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20. Three Natures
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137
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21. Dependence and Realization |
143
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22. The Harmony of Difference and Sameness |
151
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23. No Own Nature |
155 |
24. Three Natures, All Without Self |
163 |
25. Four Ways to Express the Inexpressible |
167 |
26. How We Are Bound |
173 |
27. Thinking About It Is Not Enough |
177 |
28. Being At Rest |
181 |
29. Transformation At the Root of Suffering |
187 |
30. The Blissful Body of Liberation |
191 |
Epilogue: Meditation and Compassionate Action, and the "Thirty Verses" |
195 |
Acknowledgments |
203 |
Selected Bibliography |
205 |
The "Thirty Verses" in Devanagari and Romanized Script |
207 |
English-to-Sanskrit Glossary |
213 |
Index |
217 |
About the Author and Translator |
233
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